Los Angeles Times

Court weighs restoring of Trump order

Government lawyer asks 9th Circuit to overturn injunction on enforcing penalties for ‘sanctuary cities.’

- By Maura Dolan

A lawyer for the U.S. government asked a federal appeals court in San Francisco on Wednesday to overturn a nationwide injunction blocking enforcemen­t of President Trump’s executive order against so-called sanctuary cities.

The executive order, which Trump issued five days after taking office, said local government­s that refused to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s were “not eligible for federal grants.”

During a hearing on the order, acting Assistant Atty. Gen. Chad A. Readler told the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the directive imperiled only three grants, not massive funding, and that the injunction was premature and overly broad.

Readler pointed to the wording of Trump’s order, which directed it to be enforced “consistent with law.”

“That could hardly be a direct threat to take away all of your federal dollars,” Readler said.

A three-judge 9th Circuit panel of two Democratic appointees and one Republican are reviewing the injunction issued last year by U.S. District Judge William H. Orrick III, an appointee of President Obama based in San Francisco.

Orrick decided in April 2017 that the sanctuary order was unconstitu­tional and could not be enforced nationwide.

Ninth Circuit Chief Judge Sidney R. Thomas, a President Clinton appointee, appeared skeptical of the Trump administra­tion’s position.

He noted during the hearing that Trump made “a lot of statements” showing he wanted to strip sanctuary jurisdicti­ons of federal funding.

“I think the District Court was really relying on those statements,” Thomas said.

The case was brought by San Francisco and Santa Clara County, which feared they could lose massive amounts of money unless they refused to follow policies adopted by their local lawmakers.

They argued that Trump’s order violated the 10th Amendment’s protection of states from federal interferen­ce.

After they sued the Trump administra­tion, U.S. Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions issued a memorandum specifying only three different law enforcemen­t grants that sanctuary cities and counties risked losing.

Lawyers for San Francisco and Santa Clara County told the 9th Circuit that the memorandum did not bind the Department of Homeland Security and conflicted with what the president said he intended in issuing his order.

“The point of this order is

to use federal dollars as a weapon to defund sanctuary cities that don’t comply with the policy the president prefers,” Deputy San Francisco City Atty. Christine Van Aken said.

Even though “cooler heads” in the Justice Department later said only three grants were at risk, “we shouldn’t be required to simply trust the federal government on this,” Van Aken said.

Judge Ronald M. Gould, another Clinton appointee, asked why the injunction should be nationwide.

“The harm from his executive order is nationwide,” Van Aken replied. At the least it should be aimed at the entire state of California because some federal funds flow through the state to cities, she said.

Judge Ferdinand F. Fernandez, the third member of the panel and an appointee of President George H.W. Bush, did not ask any questions.

The panel did not indicate when it would rule.

Earlier this year, the Trump administra­tion sued California over three state laws designed to protect immigrants. Legal analysts said at least two of the laws might be legally vulnerable.

 ?? Kevin Chang Daily Pilot ?? R E P. Dana Rohrabache­r (R-Cosa Mesa) speaks Tuesday in support of the Newport Beach City Council filing a lawsuit against California over its “sanctuary” law.
Kevin Chang Daily Pilot R E P. Dana Rohrabache­r (R-Cosa Mesa) speaks Tuesday in support of the Newport Beach City Council filing a lawsuit against California over its “sanctuary” law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States